If you’re a Raiders fan still desperate for football in the Bay after season’s end, college football’s national championship comes to Levi’s Stadium on Monday. If advance scouting is your thing, too, there may even be future Raiders on the field.

Here are five players on Alabama and Clemson to keep an eye on as college football season ends and draft season begins.

Quinnen Williams, Alabama DT, No. 92

Williams will be the first or second defensive tackle off the board in April, either right in front of or right behind Houston’s Ed Oliver. There’s a decent chance he’s still available when the Raiders pick at No. 4. They drafted two defensive tackles last year in Maurice Hurst and P.J. Hall, but Oakland finished last in the NFL in sacks (13) and 30th in rushing yards allowed per game (140.6). Hurst led the team with four sacks and emerged as a rare bright spot for this year’s Raiders before missing the final three games with an ankle injury. Hall missed four games due to injury, and was serviceable in his 12 games. You can never have enough players able to disrupt an opponent’s backfield, especially if you’re the Raiders. Williams, only a redshirt sophomore, has done exactly that with 87 total tackles (67 this season) and 10 sacks (eight this season) with the Crimson Tide. He’s the No. 2 prospect in the draft, according to CBS Sports.

Clelin Ferrell, Clemson DE, No. 99

The redshirt junior will either be the second or third edge rusher taken in the draft. He’s atop the crop at the position with Ohio State’s Nick Bosa and Kentucky’s Josh Allen. Ferrell has 27 sacks in the last three seasons, including 11.5 this season. He’s amassed 49 tackles for loss and at least 18 in each of the last two seasons. He also has five forced fumbles, one fumble recovery for a touchdown and five passes defensed. Certainly sounds like the kind of guy the Raiders could use to help Arden Key and fill that gaping void on the edge. Ferrell is the No. 9 prospect in the draft, according to CBS Sports.

Deionte Thompson, Alabama S, No. 14

Thompson might be a player the Raiders target with their second or third first-round pick since both will fall in the 20s or 30s. Reggie Nelson’s career is likely over and only Karl Joseph looked like a true starting safety at season’s end. Erik Harris was sturdy throughout, grabbing two interceptions over the final three weeks, and Marcus Gilchrist led the team with three. But if Oakland really wants its defensive backfield to strike fear into opponents, it needs another menace beside Joseph to complement rising star Gareon Conley and solid No. 2 corner Daryl Worley on the outside. Thompson has two interceptions, six passes defensed, three forced fumbles, one fumble recovery and 3.5 tackles for loss this season. He’s the No. 10 prospect in the draft, according to CBS Sports.

Christian Wilkins, Clemson DT, No. 42

Both Dexter Lawrence and Wilkins are defensive tackles likely to go in the draft’s first round, but only Wilkins is playing Monday with Lawrence suspended due to a banned anabolic steroid being found in his system (he also missed the semifinal against Notre Dame for the same reason). Lawrence and Wilkins are the No. 14 and 15 prospects in the draft, respectively, according to CBS Sports. We’ll focus on the latter since he’ll be the only one suited up. The Raiders might not reach for him at No. 4 if they go defensive tackle, and he probably won’t be available when their latter two first-round picks come around. But if the Raiders trade down with their first pick as they did last year, Wilkins might be a target. He’s piled up 188 tackles, 39.5 tackles for loss, 15.5 sacks, 15 passes defensed and four fumble recoveries over his four years at Clemson.

If Marshawn Lynch retires and the Raiders aren’t sold on Doug Martin as their starting running back, maybe they dip into that area during the draft. Harris has run for 3,013 yards and 22 touchdowns over the last three seasons, a span over which he also caught 46 passes for 291 yards and two scores. Harris stands 5-foot-11 and 215 pounds, around the same stature as Martin. He’s the No. 36 prospect in this year’s draft, according to CBS Sports.

Matt Schneidman joined the Bay Area News Group in September 2017 to cover the Oakland Raiders. He graduated from Syracuse University in Spring 2017 and has interned with The Buffalo News, the New York Post and USA TODAY.